Drupal is a professional community across the globe. When people step into a representation or leadership role, they are expected to represent the values and good standing of the project and community.

What we heard:

Our community has people that use Drupal, contribute to Drupal, have dedicated roles within the community, run camps, and more. In some respects, all of these people represent the Drupal community. And while some community members have greater responsibilities, the same standards cannot be broadly applied to everyone.

To exemplify this point: someone who simply chooses to use Drupal has not made the same choice to represent Drupal as someone who leads an initiative. Attending an event does not warrant the same elevated standard as organizing an event.

Representing Drupal is broadly applicable. We must better understand who is representing Drupal and what is expected of them. It is expected that those representing Drupal, especially in official capacities, maintain a higher standard to not misrepresent the community.

What we recommend:

Representing Drupal is often a choice participants make. Anyone may choose to host a Drupal meetup or give a presentation at an event about Drupal, but it is implied that anyone who is actively choosing to represent Drupal agrees to a community standard. We must define what constitutes representing Drupal and the applicable standards.

Our community expects more from it’s leaders beyond just effectively representing Drupal. We believe there should be elevated standards. Leaders not only represent Drupal, but have responsibility for things like effective communication and conflict resolution. This also motivates our training recommendation. These skills help seek consensus and promote healthy community operation. Such positions include roles like core maintainers, initiative leads, and members of working groups. We must define leadership and the higher standards for leaders throughout the community.

If new standards are also established for leadership positions within the community, it should not be assumed that people automatically consent to this. There should be consent from leaders already participating in specific roles in the community. All identified leaders should be asked to consent to the newly defined leadership standards.

It is prudent for community members to be informed of the applied standards. As an example, community members may be more inclined to attend events knowing camp organizers and volunteers agree to uphold a set of standards. We recommend the creation of a badge or certification program that can identify when such standards have been adopted.

Let’s also recognize that community leaders may need additional support to be effective. Under the umbrella of community training, we should provide leaders with training, resources, and mentorship. We demand a higher standard, but we cannot expect perfection, and we must allow room for growth.

Comments

rachel_norfolk created an issue. See original summary.

rachel_norfolk’s picture

Issue summary: View changes
Status: Active » Needs review
jhodgdon’s picture

This may need some clarification. A few thoughts:

1. The way this is written, it sounds like if I am in one of these "leadership" positions, I am required to promote some kind of official Party Line of Drupal. It's kind of confusing -- is this just meant to say that leaders need to be helping others adhere to the DCOC (which is great, and I think/hope what is being implied here), or that these leaders need to be in some way promoting Drupal software? So... This will be key: "We must define what constitutes representing Drupal and the applicable standards."

2. We will also need to define exactly what constitutes a "leader" for these standards and/or required training. For example, does it include:
- Anyone who uses groups.drupal.org to organize a meetup (online or in person, no matter the size)?
- People who organize meetups using other sites (meetup.com or mycountrydrupal.org or wahtever) that use Drupal in the name of the meetup?
- Maintainers of contributed modules -- they also need to be "leaders" in some way (interact with other contributors to the module in the issue queue, if nothing else)

3. Depending on the answers for 1 and 2, this may not have the intended effect. For example, if "agreeing to the standards" means that every "leader" needs to take some training on conflict resolution, then some people might just opt out, and the community would be poorer for it. For example, I maintain a few contrib modules on drupal.org, and I also host a monthly meetup in Spokane, WA, USA, which is listed on groups.drupal.org, and typically has about 6 people attending. I might not want to spend the time to get certified as a leader, if it's too onerous, so I might just opt out and stop volunteering my time in these ways. Is that the desired outcome? So... If there is some training that is required, it will need to be not too time consuming, and engaging, so that people don't just give up and opt out instead.

davidhernandez’s picture

I am required to promote some kind of official Party Line of Drupal

No.

or that these leaders need to be in some way promoting Drupal software?

Promoting as in marketing and sales, no. This is, as you noted, more about code of conduct and being good diplomats and representatives of the community.

jhodgdon’s picture

That is what I thought... I'm just saying that it needs more definition. :)

volkswagenchick’s picture

What is the next step for moving this forward a bit?

Gábor Hojtsy’s picture

Tagging with a common tag for easier identification.